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WARSAW — The Solidarity and Communist brain trust that has guided Poland’s political fortunes for much of the past year met Thursday, trying to work out a graceful way to give seats in the
nation’s Parliament to 33 Communist potentates who were defeated in Sunday’s elections. Following the pattern that has become standard for such gatherings, Lech Walesa arrived by train from
Gdansk and, along with a handful of key strategists, joined Interior Minister Czeslaw Kiszczak--one of those rejected by the voters--and his aides to negotiate the shape of a government for
Poland. As the meeting convened, final election results officially confirmed the Communist election humiliation, showing that only two of the government’s 35 special “national list”
candidates, running unopposed, survived the voting public’s vengeance for 45 years of Communist rule. Solidarity also won outright 92 of the 100 Senate seats and all but one of the 161 seats
left open to competitive election in the Sejm, or Parliament. It is almost sure to win those eight Senate contests and the one Sejm seat in a runoff election scheduled for June 18. The
voters’ vengeance has cut two ways for Solidarity, which feels it needs the party’s generally liberal establishment on the “national list” in order to deal with a government and parliament
that remains under Communist control, despite Solidarity’s clear mandate at the polls. Although Solidarity has been savoring the victory, the defeat of all but two of the “national list”
candidates has brought a problem for both sides and, as usual at such times, Walesa on the train from Gdansk. When asked if he was sorry the “national list” lost, Walesa, the shipyard
electrician who sometimes speaks like a savant, replied: “In politics, there is no regret. There is only calculation.” The calculation, on both sides, has been intense since Monday, when the
first vote tallies suggested the strength of the Solidarity victory and the depth of the Communist defeat. The triumph has put Solidarity under heavy pressure to form a coalition government
with the Communists. Solidarity has been resisting the pressure, coming mostly from the Communists, whose moods range from despair to defiance, and who are challenging Solidarity to drop
its opposition stance and join them in the responsibility--and the blame--for governing the country. In a normal parliamentary democracy, it would simply be up to the victorious party to
elect a premier, who would then appoint a government. But under the curious political hybrid arranged here, the Communists have been guaranteed a 65% parliamentary majority, even though
Solidarity’s success in the election amounts to a clear rejection of them. That arrangement was worked out in negotiations between Solidarity and the government that began last August and
culminated in the “round-table” agreements concluded in April. Now, in effect, the government would like to alter that arrangement and, it suggests, offer Solidarity more power. Solidarity
is looking this gift horse in the mouth very carefully. While it seems curious that an opposition force as persistent and potent as Solidarity, legally banned for eight years, should reject
an invitation to share power, the organization has its own powerful reasons for rejecting the bid. In the first place, its advisers say, Solidarity is simply unprepared to take over the
reins of government. “We are simply not ready,” said activist Jan Litynski, a successful Solidarity candidate for the Sejm. “We have no experience.” Questions of who might head such a
government, what combination of technocratic and political expertise would be required or available, reach far beyond Solidarity’s present state of planning. In addition, as Solidarity
spokesman Janusz Onyszkiewicz and other key Solidarity advisers have emphasized since the election, Solidarity has seen its role as being an opposition force to the Communists, and it
campaigned in the elections on that basis. “If we entered the government,” Onyszkiewicz said, “it would violate that trust.” Solidarity’s leaders also realize that the Communist system’s
vast structure of _ nomenclatura _ bosses, running from factories to village mayors, is so widespread and deeply entrenched that it would be beyond Solidarity’s control to change effectively
or quickly. But Solidarity’s spokesmen refer less often to another reason for its reluctance to enter into a coalition with the Communists: It is wary of being drawn too deeply into
imposing the difficult economic measures that are bound to be unpopular with the public--including its own supporters. In effect, its critics say, Solidarity wants to have its cake and eat
it too. “We are on the verge of hyper-inflation,” wrote Ryszard Bugaj, another successful Solidarity candidate, in the organization’s newspaper. “Industrial production is falling. The
agriculture situation is worsening.” Bugaj’s charges were leveled at the government of Premier Mieczyslaw Rakowski, whose resignation will almost certainly be forced by the new Parliament.
But Bugaj’s assessment of the economic situation is widely shared, and the remedies, among them painful price hikes, are not likely to be popular. The authorities in Poland, who plot like
chess champions across the board from Solidarity’s equally skilled players, clearly realize the possibilities in allowing Solidarity to shoulder as much of this burden as possible. At the
same time, there is little doubt that the Communist Party has been jarred by the scale of its defeat. “We are in a state of shock,” said Jerzy Urban, the government’s former spokesman, whose
candidacy for Parliament drew only 15% of the vote. Urban and others in recent days have described a party hierarchy in consternation, meeting in emergency sessions not only to put a
plausible public relations face on the defeat, but perhaps to thrash out its own divisions, recriminations and doubts. Whatever the immediate solution, the reconvening of Walesa and Kiszczak
and their top thinkers is the real clue to the way Poland is likely to be governed through the next two to three years. Since the first meeting between Walesa and Kiszczak last August, the
channels between Solidarity and the authorities were cleared for communication. Gradually, this team--numbering no more than a dozen men-- moved the two sides toward the round-table talks.
Then, whenever their subordinates at the talks found their tempers rising and their negotiations deadlocked, Walesa once again boarded the train, gathered his men, and worked it out with
Kiszczak and his partners. Clearly, both sides feel it is in their interests, and Poland’s, to keep this system working, and it is here that the broad shape of economic and political reform
is likely to be hammered out. For Poland, it is almost as if a new kind of Politburo has been devised, not quite totalitarian like the old, nor yet democratic, as it might some day become.
It is a government for Poland in its new age, caught between communism and the will of the people. MORE TO READ